Is “I” an alphabet or a letter?





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I have come across this sentence, "Modi understands only one alphabet, and that is the capital I", in the renowned Indian writer Dr. Shashi Tharoor's recently published book "The Paradoxical Prime Minister".



When I looked the word 'alphabet' up in dictionaries, I get the definition as 'a set of letters or symbols in a fixed order used to represent the basic set of speech sounds of a language, especially the set of letters from A to Z'. (Oxford Living Dictionaries)



So, is it correct to call a letter an alphabet?










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up vote
23
down vote

favorite
3












I have come across this sentence, "Modi understands only one alphabet, and that is the capital I", in the renowned Indian writer Dr. Shashi Tharoor's recently published book "The Paradoxical Prime Minister".



When I looked the word 'alphabet' up in dictionaries, I get the definition as 'a set of letters or symbols in a fixed order used to represent the basic set of speech sounds of a language, especially the set of letters from A to Z'. (Oxford Living Dictionaries)



So, is it correct to call a letter an alphabet?










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    Language should be respectful and kind. Avoid abusive or condescending comments. If a situation makes it hard to use respectful language, do not reply. Instead, flag to alert moderators. More information: “Code of Conduct”.
    – MetaEd
    2 days ago






  • 1




    Please avoid discussion, debate, or giving answers in comments. The comment thread is reserved for helping to improve the post: friendly clarifying questions, suggestions for improving the question, relevant but transient information, and explanations of your actions. A welcoming place for discussion of posts (or anything else) is our English Language & Usage Chat.
    – MetaEd
    2 days ago












  • And if you think the reminder to be respectful is for the other party, you're wrong. It is for you.
    – MetaEd
    2 days ago















up vote
23
down vote

favorite
3









up vote
23
down vote

favorite
3






3





I have come across this sentence, "Modi understands only one alphabet, and that is the capital I", in the renowned Indian writer Dr. Shashi Tharoor's recently published book "The Paradoxical Prime Minister".



When I looked the word 'alphabet' up in dictionaries, I get the definition as 'a set of letters or symbols in a fixed order used to represent the basic set of speech sounds of a language, especially the set of letters from A to Z'. (Oxford Living Dictionaries)



So, is it correct to call a letter an alphabet?










share|improve this question















I have come across this sentence, "Modi understands only one alphabet, and that is the capital I", in the renowned Indian writer Dr. Shashi Tharoor's recently published book "The Paradoxical Prime Minister".



When I looked the word 'alphabet' up in dictionaries, I get the definition as 'a set of letters or symbols in a fixed order used to represent the basic set of speech sounds of a language, especially the set of letters from A to Z'. (Oxford Living Dictionaries)



So, is it correct to call a letter an alphabet?







word-usage indian-english word-substitution






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edited Nov 15 at 23:56









V2Blast

13318




13318










asked Nov 15 at 17:43









mahmud koya

6,7714724




6,7714724








  • 1




    Language should be respectful and kind. Avoid abusive or condescending comments. If a situation makes it hard to use respectful language, do not reply. Instead, flag to alert moderators. More information: “Code of Conduct”.
    – MetaEd
    2 days ago






  • 1




    Please avoid discussion, debate, or giving answers in comments. The comment thread is reserved for helping to improve the post: friendly clarifying questions, suggestions for improving the question, relevant but transient information, and explanations of your actions. A welcoming place for discussion of posts (or anything else) is our English Language & Usage Chat.
    – MetaEd
    2 days ago












  • And if you think the reminder to be respectful is for the other party, you're wrong. It is for you.
    – MetaEd
    2 days ago
















  • 1




    Language should be respectful and kind. Avoid abusive or condescending comments. If a situation makes it hard to use respectful language, do not reply. Instead, flag to alert moderators. More information: “Code of Conduct”.
    – MetaEd
    2 days ago






  • 1




    Please avoid discussion, debate, or giving answers in comments. The comment thread is reserved for helping to improve the post: friendly clarifying questions, suggestions for improving the question, relevant but transient information, and explanations of your actions. A welcoming place for discussion of posts (or anything else) is our English Language & Usage Chat.
    – MetaEd
    2 days ago












  • And if you think the reminder to be respectful is for the other party, you're wrong. It is for you.
    – MetaEd
    2 days ago










1




1




Language should be respectful and kind. Avoid abusive or condescending comments. If a situation makes it hard to use respectful language, do not reply. Instead, flag to alert moderators. More information: “Code of Conduct”.
– MetaEd
2 days ago




Language should be respectful and kind. Avoid abusive or condescending comments. If a situation makes it hard to use respectful language, do not reply. Instead, flag to alert moderators. More information: “Code of Conduct”.
– MetaEd
2 days ago




1




1




Please avoid discussion, debate, or giving answers in comments. The comment thread is reserved for helping to improve the post: friendly clarifying questions, suggestions for improving the question, relevant but transient information, and explanations of your actions. A welcoming place for discussion of posts (or anything else) is our English Language & Usage Chat.
– MetaEd
2 days ago






Please avoid discussion, debate, or giving answers in comments. The comment thread is reserved for helping to improve the post: friendly clarifying questions, suggestions for improving the question, relevant but transient information, and explanations of your actions. A welcoming place for discussion of posts (or anything else) is our English Language & Usage Chat.
– MetaEd
2 days ago














And if you think the reminder to be respectful is for the other party, you're wrong. It is for you.
– MetaEd
2 days ago






And if you think the reminder to be respectful is for the other party, you're wrong. It is for you.
– MetaEd
2 days ago












4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
78
down vote



accepted










In standard US and UK usage, an alphabet is a system or collection of letters, a letter being




A written symbol or character representing a speech sound and being a component of an alphabet. [AHD]




In Indian English, however, the word alphabet is sometimes used synonymously with letter, which is all that has happened here. A web search turns up innumerable examples, including sources one might expect to have a good level of English proficiency:




Of these students, only 22% managed to read their Hindi textbook while only 43% could read a paragraph, 14% could read a word, 13% could read only the alphabets and 8% could not even identify an alphabet. (The Wire)



Please enter the alphabets and numbers in the exact way as they are displayed without any space. (CAPTCHA for the Government of Nagaland)



Earlier in the month, the company had posted a beautiful time-lapse photo of a traffic junction, which is in the form of an alphabet 'X'… (International Business Times, India edition)



I had taken it on myself to teach them the English alphabets.… Every day after my farming chores were completed around 11 am, the children would sit on a “charpoy” … [t]hen for a couple of hours I taught them the alphabets from A to Z. (Column in the Free Press Journal)




India of course has many languages and several different alphabets, so the use of alphabet to mean letter may have arisen out of a lexical gap for distinguishing corresponding characters of different case:




Do not rush her into picking up all the alphabets by the end of the first week. Remember it is 26 new alphabets and 52 letters (both upper and lower case included), and that’s a lot for her little brain. (Magic Crate blog)







share|improve this answer



















  • 9




    So, a letter being called alphabet is an example of Indianism?
    – mahmud koya
    Nov 15 at 19:31






  • 9




    @mahmudkoya Yes, I believe this usage originates from and is mostly used in South Asia, like good name or timepass; it seems like it is an ordinary usage there, but it would not be commonly understood or accepted, for example, in the Five Eyes countries.
    – choster
    Nov 15 at 19:36








  • 5




    @DanBron In fairness, this question seems to have come up before, though it was asked less ably and as a consequence oerklens was stuck with guessing.
    – choster
    Nov 15 at 19:45






  • 3




    I understod the sentence as "Modi's alphabet consists only of the capital I letter" .... which works well too, I think.
    – Edheldil
    Nov 16 at 12:45






  • 8




    @Kris I might accept that interpretation if the line were something like Modi's alphabet has only one letter, and that is the capital I, or Modi understands only an alphabet of the capital I, but that is not in fact the case.
    – choster
    Nov 16 at 14:32


















up vote
21
down vote













Technically, one letter could be an alphabet. By the definition you provided, an alphabet is a set of symbols or letters. This set could theoretically contain any number of letters.




  • The Latin alphabet is a single set of 26 letters.

  • The Greek alphabet is a single set of 24 letters.

  • The Arabic alphabet (technically abjad) is a single set of 28 letters.

  • The hypothetical alphabet in the sentence is a single set of 1
    letter.


So while in the sentence it is used as a hyperbole to mean that the individual thinks only of himself, it's possible that the letter I could also be an alphabet in which it is the only letter.






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Curious_Flyer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 2




    +1 Good interpretation and it makes sense. Thanks!
    – mahmud koya
    Nov 15 at 18:53








  • 5




    This sounds nice in theory but I think the answer is rather more prosaic.
    – choster
    Nov 15 at 19:20






  • 2




    To be pedantic, Arabic script (and some Asian writing systems also) are not strictly speaking "alphabets" because they do not have symbols for every sound in the spoken language. For example written Arabic has no "letters" representing vowels - they are either omitted, or represented by marks over or under the consonant that precedes them. The technical term for this type of script is an abjad, not an alphabet.
    – alephzero
    Nov 15 at 23:20








  • 3




    Well, the letter I is not the same as the set of letters containing exactly the letter I. Consider an analogy: a wallet containing only one coin is not the same thing as the coin alone without the wallet. I find the explanation that the text contains an Indianism (the word alphabet meaning letter) more convincing.
    – Giorgio
    Nov 16 at 21:58






  • 4




    @Giorgio right. Technically, I ≠ {I}.
    – leftaroundabout
    2 days ago




















up vote
0
down vote













"Modi understands only one alphabet, and that is the capital I" is an example of a metaphor in which Modi's understanding of a well known concept (the English alphabet) is being compared to an imaginary "alphabet" that only contains the letter "I". Even the lower case "i" is excluded from the imaginary alphabet to emphasise some selfish characteristic about Modi that Dr. Shashi Tharoor wants to emphasise, because "i/I" is only used alone in its capital form.



Thus, Dr. Shashi Tharoor is saying that Modi's utterances are restricted to: I, I, I, ...






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    up vote
    -1
    down vote













    A "letter" does not provide as much context as an "alphabet" e.g. "e is the 5th letter" vs "e is the 5th alphabet".
    The author could draw out on his views regarding Modi by stating - Modi ONLY understands the alphabet I (of all the alphabets).



    So it is correct and in fact warranted in this case to convey the meaning.






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    kSiddharth is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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    • 4




      Just so you know, outside India, English speakers don’t and can’t use “alphabet” when they want to convey “letter”. It doesn’t have that meaning. And “e” is the 5th letter does mean, to most English speakers, what you phrasing as “the 5th alphabet”. The first is completely unambiguous and clear; the second would just confuse most people (like the original poster here was confused). Clarifying this difference between Indian English and the more common English is why the first answer has so many votes: the phrase was confusing and mysterious to most, and the answer solves the mystery.
      – Dan Bron
      Nov 16 at 14:37










    • Now that I look at it with a fresh set of eyes, it does make sense to use the word letter. Good to know @Dan Bron
      – kSiddharth
      Nov 16 at 17:31











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    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes








    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    78
    down vote



    accepted










    In standard US and UK usage, an alphabet is a system or collection of letters, a letter being




    A written symbol or character representing a speech sound and being a component of an alphabet. [AHD]




    In Indian English, however, the word alphabet is sometimes used synonymously with letter, which is all that has happened here. A web search turns up innumerable examples, including sources one might expect to have a good level of English proficiency:




    Of these students, only 22% managed to read their Hindi textbook while only 43% could read a paragraph, 14% could read a word, 13% could read only the alphabets and 8% could not even identify an alphabet. (The Wire)



    Please enter the alphabets and numbers in the exact way as they are displayed without any space. (CAPTCHA for the Government of Nagaland)



    Earlier in the month, the company had posted a beautiful time-lapse photo of a traffic junction, which is in the form of an alphabet 'X'… (International Business Times, India edition)



    I had taken it on myself to teach them the English alphabets.… Every day after my farming chores were completed around 11 am, the children would sit on a “charpoy” … [t]hen for a couple of hours I taught them the alphabets from A to Z. (Column in the Free Press Journal)




    India of course has many languages and several different alphabets, so the use of alphabet to mean letter may have arisen out of a lexical gap for distinguishing corresponding characters of different case:




    Do not rush her into picking up all the alphabets by the end of the first week. Remember it is 26 new alphabets and 52 letters (both upper and lower case included), and that’s a lot for her little brain. (Magic Crate blog)







    share|improve this answer



















    • 9




      So, a letter being called alphabet is an example of Indianism?
      – mahmud koya
      Nov 15 at 19:31






    • 9




      @mahmudkoya Yes, I believe this usage originates from and is mostly used in South Asia, like good name or timepass; it seems like it is an ordinary usage there, but it would not be commonly understood or accepted, for example, in the Five Eyes countries.
      – choster
      Nov 15 at 19:36








    • 5




      @DanBron In fairness, this question seems to have come up before, though it was asked less ably and as a consequence oerklens was stuck with guessing.
      – choster
      Nov 15 at 19:45






    • 3




      I understod the sentence as "Modi's alphabet consists only of the capital I letter" .... which works well too, I think.
      – Edheldil
      Nov 16 at 12:45






    • 8




      @Kris I might accept that interpretation if the line were something like Modi's alphabet has only one letter, and that is the capital I, or Modi understands only an alphabet of the capital I, but that is not in fact the case.
      – choster
      Nov 16 at 14:32















    up vote
    78
    down vote



    accepted










    In standard US and UK usage, an alphabet is a system or collection of letters, a letter being




    A written symbol or character representing a speech sound and being a component of an alphabet. [AHD]




    In Indian English, however, the word alphabet is sometimes used synonymously with letter, which is all that has happened here. A web search turns up innumerable examples, including sources one might expect to have a good level of English proficiency:




    Of these students, only 22% managed to read their Hindi textbook while only 43% could read a paragraph, 14% could read a word, 13% could read only the alphabets and 8% could not even identify an alphabet. (The Wire)



    Please enter the alphabets and numbers in the exact way as they are displayed without any space. (CAPTCHA for the Government of Nagaland)



    Earlier in the month, the company had posted a beautiful time-lapse photo of a traffic junction, which is in the form of an alphabet 'X'… (International Business Times, India edition)



    I had taken it on myself to teach them the English alphabets.… Every day after my farming chores were completed around 11 am, the children would sit on a “charpoy” … [t]hen for a couple of hours I taught them the alphabets from A to Z. (Column in the Free Press Journal)




    India of course has many languages and several different alphabets, so the use of alphabet to mean letter may have arisen out of a lexical gap for distinguishing corresponding characters of different case:




    Do not rush her into picking up all the alphabets by the end of the first week. Remember it is 26 new alphabets and 52 letters (both upper and lower case included), and that’s a lot for her little brain. (Magic Crate blog)







    share|improve this answer



















    • 9




      So, a letter being called alphabet is an example of Indianism?
      – mahmud koya
      Nov 15 at 19:31






    • 9




      @mahmudkoya Yes, I believe this usage originates from and is mostly used in South Asia, like good name or timepass; it seems like it is an ordinary usage there, but it would not be commonly understood or accepted, for example, in the Five Eyes countries.
      – choster
      Nov 15 at 19:36








    • 5




      @DanBron In fairness, this question seems to have come up before, though it was asked less ably and as a consequence oerklens was stuck with guessing.
      – choster
      Nov 15 at 19:45






    • 3




      I understod the sentence as "Modi's alphabet consists only of the capital I letter" .... which works well too, I think.
      – Edheldil
      Nov 16 at 12:45






    • 8




      @Kris I might accept that interpretation if the line were something like Modi's alphabet has only one letter, and that is the capital I, or Modi understands only an alphabet of the capital I, but that is not in fact the case.
      – choster
      Nov 16 at 14:32













    up vote
    78
    down vote



    accepted







    up vote
    78
    down vote



    accepted






    In standard US and UK usage, an alphabet is a system or collection of letters, a letter being




    A written symbol or character representing a speech sound and being a component of an alphabet. [AHD]




    In Indian English, however, the word alphabet is sometimes used synonymously with letter, which is all that has happened here. A web search turns up innumerable examples, including sources one might expect to have a good level of English proficiency:




    Of these students, only 22% managed to read their Hindi textbook while only 43% could read a paragraph, 14% could read a word, 13% could read only the alphabets and 8% could not even identify an alphabet. (The Wire)



    Please enter the alphabets and numbers in the exact way as they are displayed without any space. (CAPTCHA for the Government of Nagaland)



    Earlier in the month, the company had posted a beautiful time-lapse photo of a traffic junction, which is in the form of an alphabet 'X'… (International Business Times, India edition)



    I had taken it on myself to teach them the English alphabets.… Every day after my farming chores were completed around 11 am, the children would sit on a “charpoy” … [t]hen for a couple of hours I taught them the alphabets from A to Z. (Column in the Free Press Journal)




    India of course has many languages and several different alphabets, so the use of alphabet to mean letter may have arisen out of a lexical gap for distinguishing corresponding characters of different case:




    Do not rush her into picking up all the alphabets by the end of the first week. Remember it is 26 new alphabets and 52 letters (both upper and lower case included), and that’s a lot for her little brain. (Magic Crate blog)







    share|improve this answer














    In standard US and UK usage, an alphabet is a system or collection of letters, a letter being




    A written symbol or character representing a speech sound and being a component of an alphabet. [AHD]




    In Indian English, however, the word alphabet is sometimes used synonymously with letter, which is all that has happened here. A web search turns up innumerable examples, including sources one might expect to have a good level of English proficiency:




    Of these students, only 22% managed to read their Hindi textbook while only 43% could read a paragraph, 14% could read a word, 13% could read only the alphabets and 8% could not even identify an alphabet. (The Wire)



    Please enter the alphabets and numbers in the exact way as they are displayed without any space. (CAPTCHA for the Government of Nagaland)



    Earlier in the month, the company had posted a beautiful time-lapse photo of a traffic junction, which is in the form of an alphabet 'X'… (International Business Times, India edition)



    I had taken it on myself to teach them the English alphabets.… Every day after my farming chores were completed around 11 am, the children would sit on a “charpoy” … [t]hen for a couple of hours I taught them the alphabets from A to Z. (Column in the Free Press Journal)




    India of course has many languages and several different alphabets, so the use of alphabet to mean letter may have arisen out of a lexical gap for distinguishing corresponding characters of different case:




    Do not rush her into picking up all the alphabets by the end of the first week. Remember it is 26 new alphabets and 52 letters (both upper and lower case included), and that’s a lot for her little brain. (Magic Crate blog)








    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Nov 15 at 19:26

























    answered Nov 15 at 19:19









    choster

    36.1k1481132




    36.1k1481132








    • 9




      So, a letter being called alphabet is an example of Indianism?
      – mahmud koya
      Nov 15 at 19:31






    • 9




      @mahmudkoya Yes, I believe this usage originates from and is mostly used in South Asia, like good name or timepass; it seems like it is an ordinary usage there, but it would not be commonly understood or accepted, for example, in the Five Eyes countries.
      – choster
      Nov 15 at 19:36








    • 5




      @DanBron In fairness, this question seems to have come up before, though it was asked less ably and as a consequence oerklens was stuck with guessing.
      – choster
      Nov 15 at 19:45






    • 3




      I understod the sentence as "Modi's alphabet consists only of the capital I letter" .... which works well too, I think.
      – Edheldil
      Nov 16 at 12:45






    • 8




      @Kris I might accept that interpretation if the line were something like Modi's alphabet has only one letter, and that is the capital I, or Modi understands only an alphabet of the capital I, but that is not in fact the case.
      – choster
      Nov 16 at 14:32














    • 9




      So, a letter being called alphabet is an example of Indianism?
      – mahmud koya
      Nov 15 at 19:31






    • 9




      @mahmudkoya Yes, I believe this usage originates from and is mostly used in South Asia, like good name or timepass; it seems like it is an ordinary usage there, but it would not be commonly understood or accepted, for example, in the Five Eyes countries.
      – choster
      Nov 15 at 19:36








    • 5




      @DanBron In fairness, this question seems to have come up before, though it was asked less ably and as a consequence oerklens was stuck with guessing.
      – choster
      Nov 15 at 19:45






    • 3




      I understod the sentence as "Modi's alphabet consists only of the capital I letter" .... which works well too, I think.
      – Edheldil
      Nov 16 at 12:45






    • 8




      @Kris I might accept that interpretation if the line were something like Modi's alphabet has only one letter, and that is the capital I, or Modi understands only an alphabet of the capital I, but that is not in fact the case.
      – choster
      Nov 16 at 14:32








    9




    9




    So, a letter being called alphabet is an example of Indianism?
    – mahmud koya
    Nov 15 at 19:31




    So, a letter being called alphabet is an example of Indianism?
    – mahmud koya
    Nov 15 at 19:31




    9




    9




    @mahmudkoya Yes, I believe this usage originates from and is mostly used in South Asia, like good name or timepass; it seems like it is an ordinary usage there, but it would not be commonly understood or accepted, for example, in the Five Eyes countries.
    – choster
    Nov 15 at 19:36






    @mahmudkoya Yes, I believe this usage originates from and is mostly used in South Asia, like good name or timepass; it seems like it is an ordinary usage there, but it would not be commonly understood or accepted, for example, in the Five Eyes countries.
    – choster
    Nov 15 at 19:36






    5




    5




    @DanBron In fairness, this question seems to have come up before, though it was asked less ably and as a consequence oerklens was stuck with guessing.
    – choster
    Nov 15 at 19:45




    @DanBron In fairness, this question seems to have come up before, though it was asked less ably and as a consequence oerklens was stuck with guessing.
    – choster
    Nov 15 at 19:45




    3




    3




    I understod the sentence as "Modi's alphabet consists only of the capital I letter" .... which works well too, I think.
    – Edheldil
    Nov 16 at 12:45




    I understod the sentence as "Modi's alphabet consists only of the capital I letter" .... which works well too, I think.
    – Edheldil
    Nov 16 at 12:45




    8




    8




    @Kris I might accept that interpretation if the line were something like Modi's alphabet has only one letter, and that is the capital I, or Modi understands only an alphabet of the capital I, but that is not in fact the case.
    – choster
    Nov 16 at 14:32




    @Kris I might accept that interpretation if the line were something like Modi's alphabet has only one letter, and that is the capital I, or Modi understands only an alphabet of the capital I, but that is not in fact the case.
    – choster
    Nov 16 at 14:32












    up vote
    21
    down vote













    Technically, one letter could be an alphabet. By the definition you provided, an alphabet is a set of symbols or letters. This set could theoretically contain any number of letters.




    • The Latin alphabet is a single set of 26 letters.

    • The Greek alphabet is a single set of 24 letters.

    • The Arabic alphabet (technically abjad) is a single set of 28 letters.

    • The hypothetical alphabet in the sentence is a single set of 1
      letter.


    So while in the sentence it is used as a hyperbole to mean that the individual thinks only of himself, it's possible that the letter I could also be an alphabet in which it is the only letter.






    share|improve this answer










    New contributor




    Curious_Flyer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.














    • 2




      +1 Good interpretation and it makes sense. Thanks!
      – mahmud koya
      Nov 15 at 18:53








    • 5




      This sounds nice in theory but I think the answer is rather more prosaic.
      – choster
      Nov 15 at 19:20






    • 2




      To be pedantic, Arabic script (and some Asian writing systems also) are not strictly speaking "alphabets" because they do not have symbols for every sound in the spoken language. For example written Arabic has no "letters" representing vowels - they are either omitted, or represented by marks over or under the consonant that precedes them. The technical term for this type of script is an abjad, not an alphabet.
      – alephzero
      Nov 15 at 23:20








    • 3




      Well, the letter I is not the same as the set of letters containing exactly the letter I. Consider an analogy: a wallet containing only one coin is not the same thing as the coin alone without the wallet. I find the explanation that the text contains an Indianism (the word alphabet meaning letter) more convincing.
      – Giorgio
      Nov 16 at 21:58






    • 4




      @Giorgio right. Technically, I ≠ {I}.
      – leftaroundabout
      2 days ago

















    up vote
    21
    down vote













    Technically, one letter could be an alphabet. By the definition you provided, an alphabet is a set of symbols or letters. This set could theoretically contain any number of letters.




    • The Latin alphabet is a single set of 26 letters.

    • The Greek alphabet is a single set of 24 letters.

    • The Arabic alphabet (technically abjad) is a single set of 28 letters.

    • The hypothetical alphabet in the sentence is a single set of 1
      letter.


    So while in the sentence it is used as a hyperbole to mean that the individual thinks only of himself, it's possible that the letter I could also be an alphabet in which it is the only letter.






    share|improve this answer










    New contributor




    Curious_Flyer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.














    • 2




      +1 Good interpretation and it makes sense. Thanks!
      – mahmud koya
      Nov 15 at 18:53








    • 5




      This sounds nice in theory but I think the answer is rather more prosaic.
      – choster
      Nov 15 at 19:20






    • 2




      To be pedantic, Arabic script (and some Asian writing systems also) are not strictly speaking "alphabets" because they do not have symbols for every sound in the spoken language. For example written Arabic has no "letters" representing vowels - they are either omitted, or represented by marks over or under the consonant that precedes them. The technical term for this type of script is an abjad, not an alphabet.
      – alephzero
      Nov 15 at 23:20








    • 3




      Well, the letter I is not the same as the set of letters containing exactly the letter I. Consider an analogy: a wallet containing only one coin is not the same thing as the coin alone without the wallet. I find the explanation that the text contains an Indianism (the word alphabet meaning letter) more convincing.
      – Giorgio
      Nov 16 at 21:58






    • 4




      @Giorgio right. Technically, I ≠ {I}.
      – leftaroundabout
      2 days ago















    up vote
    21
    down vote










    up vote
    21
    down vote









    Technically, one letter could be an alphabet. By the definition you provided, an alphabet is a set of symbols or letters. This set could theoretically contain any number of letters.




    • The Latin alphabet is a single set of 26 letters.

    • The Greek alphabet is a single set of 24 letters.

    • The Arabic alphabet (technically abjad) is a single set of 28 letters.

    • The hypothetical alphabet in the sentence is a single set of 1
      letter.


    So while in the sentence it is used as a hyperbole to mean that the individual thinks only of himself, it's possible that the letter I could also be an alphabet in which it is the only letter.






    share|improve this answer










    New contributor




    Curious_Flyer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.









    Technically, one letter could be an alphabet. By the definition you provided, an alphabet is a set of symbols or letters. This set could theoretically contain any number of letters.




    • The Latin alphabet is a single set of 26 letters.

    • The Greek alphabet is a single set of 24 letters.

    • The Arabic alphabet (technically abjad) is a single set of 28 letters.

    • The hypothetical alphabet in the sentence is a single set of 1
      letter.


    So while in the sentence it is used as a hyperbole to mean that the individual thinks only of himself, it's possible that the letter I could also be an alphabet in which it is the only letter.







    share|improve this answer










    New contributor




    Curious_Flyer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.









    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Nov 16 at 13:35





















    New contributor




    Curious_Flyer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.









    answered Nov 15 at 18:41









    Curious_Flyer

    3775




    3775




    New contributor




    Curious_Flyer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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    New contributor





    Curious_Flyer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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    Check out our Code of Conduct.








    • 2




      +1 Good interpretation and it makes sense. Thanks!
      – mahmud koya
      Nov 15 at 18:53








    • 5




      This sounds nice in theory but I think the answer is rather more prosaic.
      – choster
      Nov 15 at 19:20






    • 2




      To be pedantic, Arabic script (and some Asian writing systems also) are not strictly speaking "alphabets" because they do not have symbols for every sound in the spoken language. For example written Arabic has no "letters" representing vowels - they are either omitted, or represented by marks over or under the consonant that precedes them. The technical term for this type of script is an abjad, not an alphabet.
      – alephzero
      Nov 15 at 23:20








    • 3




      Well, the letter I is not the same as the set of letters containing exactly the letter I. Consider an analogy: a wallet containing only one coin is not the same thing as the coin alone without the wallet. I find the explanation that the text contains an Indianism (the word alphabet meaning letter) more convincing.
      – Giorgio
      Nov 16 at 21:58






    • 4




      @Giorgio right. Technically, I ≠ {I}.
      – leftaroundabout
      2 days ago
















    • 2




      +1 Good interpretation and it makes sense. Thanks!
      – mahmud koya
      Nov 15 at 18:53








    • 5




      This sounds nice in theory but I think the answer is rather more prosaic.
      – choster
      Nov 15 at 19:20






    • 2




      To be pedantic, Arabic script (and some Asian writing systems also) are not strictly speaking "alphabets" because they do not have symbols for every sound in the spoken language. For example written Arabic has no "letters" representing vowels - they are either omitted, or represented by marks over or under the consonant that precedes them. The technical term for this type of script is an abjad, not an alphabet.
      – alephzero
      Nov 15 at 23:20








    • 3




      Well, the letter I is not the same as the set of letters containing exactly the letter I. Consider an analogy: a wallet containing only one coin is not the same thing as the coin alone without the wallet. I find the explanation that the text contains an Indianism (the word alphabet meaning letter) more convincing.
      – Giorgio
      Nov 16 at 21:58






    • 4




      @Giorgio right. Technically, I ≠ {I}.
      – leftaroundabout
      2 days ago










    2




    2




    +1 Good interpretation and it makes sense. Thanks!
    – mahmud koya
    Nov 15 at 18:53






    +1 Good interpretation and it makes sense. Thanks!
    – mahmud koya
    Nov 15 at 18:53






    5




    5




    This sounds nice in theory but I think the answer is rather more prosaic.
    – choster
    Nov 15 at 19:20




    This sounds nice in theory but I think the answer is rather more prosaic.
    – choster
    Nov 15 at 19:20




    2




    2




    To be pedantic, Arabic script (and some Asian writing systems also) are not strictly speaking "alphabets" because they do not have symbols for every sound in the spoken language. For example written Arabic has no "letters" representing vowels - they are either omitted, or represented by marks over or under the consonant that precedes them. The technical term for this type of script is an abjad, not an alphabet.
    – alephzero
    Nov 15 at 23:20






    To be pedantic, Arabic script (and some Asian writing systems also) are not strictly speaking "alphabets" because they do not have symbols for every sound in the spoken language. For example written Arabic has no "letters" representing vowels - they are either omitted, or represented by marks over or under the consonant that precedes them. The technical term for this type of script is an abjad, not an alphabet.
    – alephzero
    Nov 15 at 23:20






    3




    3




    Well, the letter I is not the same as the set of letters containing exactly the letter I. Consider an analogy: a wallet containing only one coin is not the same thing as the coin alone without the wallet. I find the explanation that the text contains an Indianism (the word alphabet meaning letter) more convincing.
    – Giorgio
    Nov 16 at 21:58




    Well, the letter I is not the same as the set of letters containing exactly the letter I. Consider an analogy: a wallet containing only one coin is not the same thing as the coin alone without the wallet. I find the explanation that the text contains an Indianism (the word alphabet meaning letter) more convincing.
    – Giorgio
    Nov 16 at 21:58




    4




    4




    @Giorgio right. Technically, I ≠ {I}.
    – leftaroundabout
    2 days ago






    @Giorgio right. Technically, I ≠ {I}.
    – leftaroundabout
    2 days ago












    up vote
    0
    down vote













    "Modi understands only one alphabet, and that is the capital I" is an example of a metaphor in which Modi's understanding of a well known concept (the English alphabet) is being compared to an imaginary "alphabet" that only contains the letter "I". Even the lower case "i" is excluded from the imaginary alphabet to emphasise some selfish characteristic about Modi that Dr. Shashi Tharoor wants to emphasise, because "i/I" is only used alone in its capital form.



    Thus, Dr. Shashi Tharoor is saying that Modi's utterances are restricted to: I, I, I, ...






    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      0
      down vote













      "Modi understands only one alphabet, and that is the capital I" is an example of a metaphor in which Modi's understanding of a well known concept (the English alphabet) is being compared to an imaginary "alphabet" that only contains the letter "I". Even the lower case "i" is excluded from the imaginary alphabet to emphasise some selfish characteristic about Modi that Dr. Shashi Tharoor wants to emphasise, because "i/I" is only used alone in its capital form.



      Thus, Dr. Shashi Tharoor is saying that Modi's utterances are restricted to: I, I, I, ...






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        0
        down vote










        up vote
        0
        down vote









        "Modi understands only one alphabet, and that is the capital I" is an example of a metaphor in which Modi's understanding of a well known concept (the English alphabet) is being compared to an imaginary "alphabet" that only contains the letter "I". Even the lower case "i" is excluded from the imaginary alphabet to emphasise some selfish characteristic about Modi that Dr. Shashi Tharoor wants to emphasise, because "i/I" is only used alone in its capital form.



        Thus, Dr. Shashi Tharoor is saying that Modi's utterances are restricted to: I, I, I, ...






        share|improve this answer












        "Modi understands only one alphabet, and that is the capital I" is an example of a metaphor in which Modi's understanding of a well known concept (the English alphabet) is being compared to an imaginary "alphabet" that only contains the letter "I". Even the lower case "i" is excluded from the imaginary alphabet to emphasise some selfish characteristic about Modi that Dr. Shashi Tharoor wants to emphasise, because "i/I" is only used alone in its capital form.



        Thus, Dr. Shashi Tharoor is saying that Modi's utterances are restricted to: I, I, I, ...







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered yesterday









        jimalton

        693




        693






















            up vote
            -1
            down vote













            A "letter" does not provide as much context as an "alphabet" e.g. "e is the 5th letter" vs "e is the 5th alphabet".
            The author could draw out on his views regarding Modi by stating - Modi ONLY understands the alphabet I (of all the alphabets).



            So it is correct and in fact warranted in this case to convey the meaning.






            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




            kSiddharth is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.














            • 4




              Just so you know, outside India, English speakers don’t and can’t use “alphabet” when they want to convey “letter”. It doesn’t have that meaning. And “e” is the 5th letter does mean, to most English speakers, what you phrasing as “the 5th alphabet”. The first is completely unambiguous and clear; the second would just confuse most people (like the original poster here was confused). Clarifying this difference between Indian English and the more common English is why the first answer has so many votes: the phrase was confusing and mysterious to most, and the answer solves the mystery.
              – Dan Bron
              Nov 16 at 14:37










            • Now that I look at it with a fresh set of eyes, it does make sense to use the word letter. Good to know @Dan Bron
              – kSiddharth
              Nov 16 at 17:31















            up vote
            -1
            down vote













            A "letter" does not provide as much context as an "alphabet" e.g. "e is the 5th letter" vs "e is the 5th alphabet".
            The author could draw out on his views regarding Modi by stating - Modi ONLY understands the alphabet I (of all the alphabets).



            So it is correct and in fact warranted in this case to convey the meaning.






            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




            kSiddharth is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.














            • 4




              Just so you know, outside India, English speakers don’t and can’t use “alphabet” when they want to convey “letter”. It doesn’t have that meaning. And “e” is the 5th letter does mean, to most English speakers, what you phrasing as “the 5th alphabet”. The first is completely unambiguous and clear; the second would just confuse most people (like the original poster here was confused). Clarifying this difference between Indian English and the more common English is why the first answer has so many votes: the phrase was confusing and mysterious to most, and the answer solves the mystery.
              – Dan Bron
              Nov 16 at 14:37










            • Now that I look at it with a fresh set of eyes, it does make sense to use the word letter. Good to know @Dan Bron
              – kSiddharth
              Nov 16 at 17:31













            up vote
            -1
            down vote










            up vote
            -1
            down vote









            A "letter" does not provide as much context as an "alphabet" e.g. "e is the 5th letter" vs "e is the 5th alphabet".
            The author could draw out on his views regarding Modi by stating - Modi ONLY understands the alphabet I (of all the alphabets).



            So it is correct and in fact warranted in this case to convey the meaning.






            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




            kSiddharth is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.









            A "letter" does not provide as much context as an "alphabet" e.g. "e is the 5th letter" vs "e is the 5th alphabet".
            The author could draw out on his views regarding Modi by stating - Modi ONLY understands the alphabet I (of all the alphabets).



            So it is correct and in fact warranted in this case to convey the meaning.







            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




            kSiddharth is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.









            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Nov 16 at 13:39





















            New contributor




            kSiddharth is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.









            answered Nov 16 at 13:21









            kSiddharth

            112




            112




            New contributor




            kSiddharth is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.





            New contributor





            kSiddharth is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.






            kSiddharth is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.








            • 4




              Just so you know, outside India, English speakers don’t and can’t use “alphabet” when they want to convey “letter”. It doesn’t have that meaning. And “e” is the 5th letter does mean, to most English speakers, what you phrasing as “the 5th alphabet”. The first is completely unambiguous and clear; the second would just confuse most people (like the original poster here was confused). Clarifying this difference between Indian English and the more common English is why the first answer has so many votes: the phrase was confusing and mysterious to most, and the answer solves the mystery.
              – Dan Bron
              Nov 16 at 14:37










            • Now that I look at it with a fresh set of eyes, it does make sense to use the word letter. Good to know @Dan Bron
              – kSiddharth
              Nov 16 at 17:31














            • 4




              Just so you know, outside India, English speakers don’t and can’t use “alphabet” when they want to convey “letter”. It doesn’t have that meaning. And “e” is the 5th letter does mean, to most English speakers, what you phrasing as “the 5th alphabet”. The first is completely unambiguous and clear; the second would just confuse most people (like the original poster here was confused). Clarifying this difference between Indian English and the more common English is why the first answer has so many votes: the phrase was confusing and mysterious to most, and the answer solves the mystery.
              – Dan Bron
              Nov 16 at 14:37










            • Now that I look at it with a fresh set of eyes, it does make sense to use the word letter. Good to know @Dan Bron
              – kSiddharth
              Nov 16 at 17:31








            4




            4




            Just so you know, outside India, English speakers don’t and can’t use “alphabet” when they want to convey “letter”. It doesn’t have that meaning. And “e” is the 5th letter does mean, to most English speakers, what you phrasing as “the 5th alphabet”. The first is completely unambiguous and clear; the second would just confuse most people (like the original poster here was confused). Clarifying this difference between Indian English and the more common English is why the first answer has so many votes: the phrase was confusing and mysterious to most, and the answer solves the mystery.
            – Dan Bron
            Nov 16 at 14:37




            Just so you know, outside India, English speakers don’t and can’t use “alphabet” when they want to convey “letter”. It doesn’t have that meaning. And “e” is the 5th letter does mean, to most English speakers, what you phrasing as “the 5th alphabet”. The first is completely unambiguous and clear; the second would just confuse most people (like the original poster here was confused). Clarifying this difference between Indian English and the more common English is why the first answer has so many votes: the phrase was confusing and mysterious to most, and the answer solves the mystery.
            – Dan Bron
            Nov 16 at 14:37












            Now that I look at it with a fresh set of eyes, it does make sense to use the word letter. Good to know @Dan Bron
            – kSiddharth
            Nov 16 at 17:31




            Now that I look at it with a fresh set of eyes, it does make sense to use the word letter. Good to know @Dan Bron
            – kSiddharth
            Nov 16 at 17:31


















             

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